WO2017078582A1 - A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil - Google Patents

A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2017078582A1
WO2017078582A1 PCT/SE2015/051164 SE2015051164W WO2017078582A1 WO 2017078582 A1 WO2017078582 A1 WO 2017078582A1 SE 2015051164 W SE2015051164 W SE 2015051164W WO 2017078582 A1 WO2017078582 A1 WO 2017078582A1
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Prior art keywords
oil
lignin
phase
catalyst
hydrocarbon product
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PCT/SE2015/051164
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French (fr)
Inventor
Christian Kugge
Anders Hultgren
Kai DANNENBAUER
Claudia Liebold
Florian Huber
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Sca Forest Products Ab
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Priority to LTEP15907898.9T priority Critical patent/LT3371279T/en
Priority to PL15907898T priority patent/PL3371279T3/en
Priority to PT159078989T priority patent/PT3371279T/en
Priority to CA3004244A priority patent/CA3004244C/en
Priority to PCT/SE2015/051164 priority patent/WO2017078582A1/en
Priority to DK15907898.9T priority patent/DK3371279T3/en
Priority to ES15907898T priority patent/ES2773659T3/en
Priority to EP15907898.9A priority patent/EP3371279B1/en
Publication of WO2017078582A1 publication Critical patent/WO2017078582A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07GCOMPOUNDS OF UNKNOWN CONSTITUTION
    • C07G1/00Lignin; Lignin derivatives
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08HDERIVATIVES OF NATURAL MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08H6/00Macromolecular compounds derived from lignin, e.g. tannins, humic acids
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G1/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oil-shale, oil-sand, or non-melting solid carbonaceous or similar materials, e.g. wood, coal
    • C10G1/08Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oil-shale, oil-sand, or non-melting solid carbonaceous or similar materials, e.g. wood, coal with moving catalysts
    • C10G1/086Characterised by the catalyst used
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G3/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids
    • C10G3/42Catalytic treatment
    • C10G3/44Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used
    • C10G3/45Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used containing iron group metals or compounds thereof
    • C10G3/46Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used containing iron group metals or compounds thereof in combination with chromium, molybdenum, tungsten metals or compounds thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G3/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids
    • C10G3/42Catalytic treatment
    • C10G3/44Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used
    • C10G3/47Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used containing platinum group metals or compounds thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G3/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids
    • C10G3/42Catalytic treatment
    • C10G3/44Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used
    • C10G3/48Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used further characterised by the catalyst support
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G3/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids
    • C10G3/42Catalytic treatment
    • C10G3/44Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used
    • C10G3/48Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used further characterised by the catalyst support
    • C10G3/49Catalytic treatment characterised by the catalyst used further characterised by the catalyst support containing crystalline aluminosilicates, e.g. molecular sieves
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G3/00Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids
    • C10G3/50Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oxygen-containing organic materials, e.g. fatty oils, fatty acids in the presence of hydrogen, hydrogen donors or hydrogen generating compounds
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10LFUELS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NATURAL GAS; SYNTHETIC NATURAL GAS OBTAINED BY PROCESSES NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C10G, C10K; LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS; ADDING MATERIALS TO FUELS OR FIRES TO REDUCE SMOKE OR UNDESIRABLE DEPOSITS OR TO FACILITATE SOOT REMOVAL; FIRELIGHTERS
    • C10L1/00Liquid carbonaceous fuels
    • C10L1/04Liquid carbonaceous fuels essentially based on blends of hydrocarbons
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10GCRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
    • C10G2300/00Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups C10G1/00 - C10G99/00
    • C10G2300/10Feedstock materials
    • C10G2300/1011Biomass
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P30/00Technologies relating to oil refining and petrochemical industry
    • Y02P30/20Technologies relating to oil refining and petrochemical industry using bio-feedstock

Definitions

  • the present application relates to a process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil, and a hydrocarbon product obtainable by the process.
  • the present invention aims at providing a process for producing renewable hydrocarbon products from a lignin based oil.
  • the process of the present application relates to producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, wherein the lignin oil has an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil.
  • the lignin oil has an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 w
  • the process for producing the hydrocarbon product comprises the steps of treating the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more of a hydrodesulfurization catalyst selected from NiMo on alumina or CoMo on alumina; or a hydrodesulfurization and cracking catalyst selected from NiMo on zeolite or CoMo on zeolite, or a hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst selected from NiO on zeolite, zeolite alone or combinations thereof, or a hydrodeoxygenation catalyst selected from Ni/NiO, Cu/Cr, Pd/Cu, or Pt on a support material, such as chromite and/or alumina and/or zirconia and/or graphite and/or carbon and/or silica; or combinations thereof, and applying a H 2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200-2000 l/l (STP conditions), preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature
  • the reactor used in the process is preferably a reactor comprising a packed bed, which includes a first section of inert filling material and/or guard material and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above and a second section of the catalyst selected as defined above and optionally a guard material on top of the catalyst, and a third section of inert filling material and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above, and wherein the lignin oil passes first the first section, then the second section, and then the third section.
  • the reactor preferably comprises a pre-heating zone and an isothermal zone, wherein the lignin oil temperature in the isothermal zone is the reaction temperature 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and the lignin oil temperature in the pre-heating zone is 1-10 °C below the reaction temperature, and wherein the isothermal zone comprises the second section of the packed bed, and optionally a portion of the first section of the packed bed.
  • the catalyst in the second section is advantageously a physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite, and the volume ratio of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite is preferably 1-4:1, more preferably 1.5-2.5:1, most preferably 2:1.
  • the catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite, preferably with a volume ratio of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, more preferably 1.5-2.5:1, most preferably 2:1.
  • the process resulting hydrocarbon product is preferably separated into three fractions by means of distillation, wherein a first fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C, a second fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and
  • a third fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C.
  • a fraction having a boiling point of 250-285 °C is separated from the hydrocarbon product, said fraction comprising dibenzyl, cyclohexylethylbenzene, 4-methyldiphenylmethane, benzylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane and 1,2-dicyclohexylethane may be of particular interest.
  • the gaseous phase separated in the phase separation is preferably led through a gas treater, whereby H 2 S is removed, and H 2 is then separated and recycled to the reactor, and the rest of the gases are retrieved as a gaseous hydrocarbon containing product.
  • the gaseous hydrocarbon containing product may be led to a steam reformer producing H 2 and CO or C0 2 , wherein H 2 and CO are optionally led back to the process.
  • the lignin oil is desalted in a desalting unit prior to the reactor, said desalting unit comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof.
  • additional viscosity modifying, and/or lubricating and/or carbonium/arenium ion scavenging components may be added to the lignin oil in an amount of 1-80 wt-%, preferably 10-20 wt% based on the weight of the lignin oil prior to the reactor and any desalting unit, said additional components being a combination of a solvent, preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, p-cymene, anisole, diesel, gasoline, benzyl alcohol; or phenol, 2- naphthol, catechol, thymol, guaiacol, cresol; and/or mixtures thereof, and the hydrocarbon product obtained by the process.
  • a solvent preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, p-cymene
  • anisole diesel
  • diesel gasoline
  • benzyl alcohol or
  • the lignin oil fed into the process is most preferably a lignin oil obtainable by a process in which a black liquor composition comprising kraft black liquor and having a hydroxide ion concentration of 1-40 g/l, based on the volume of black liquor, is reacted, preferably under a H 2 or H 2 /CO syngas pressure of 5-150 bar, at 220-350 °C for 10-120 minutes in the absence of a solid catalyst; or at 180-240 °C for 10-120 minutes in the presence of a solid catalyst, thereby causing depolymerization of lignin in the black liquor; the reacted composition is cooled to a temperature below the boiling point of a solvent to be added subsequently, and is thereafter acidified until a pH of 4-5 is reached; and a solvent is added to the composition in order to extract oil from the composition, and the composition is separated by phase separation in a first separation step into an oil phase comprising solvent, oil, and organic acids; a first water phase comprising water, salts, and
  • the present invention also relates to a hydrocarbon product obtained by the above process said product comprising cyclohexane, methylcyclohexane, toluene, ethylcyclohexane, ethylcyclopentane, propylcyclohexane, propylbenzene, l-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl) cyclohexane, butylcyclohexane, decalin, tetralin, methyltetralin, butylbenzene, decahydro-2- methylnaphthalene, pentylcyclohexane, hexylcyclohexane, diethylcyclohexane, bicyclohexyl, biphenylmethane, l-methyl-2-cyclohexylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane,
  • benzylcyclohexane methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,2-dicyclohexylethane, 1-phenyl-l- cyclohexylethane, l-phenyl-2-2cyclohexylethane, cyclohexylethylbenzene, dibenzyl, 4- methyldiphenylmethane, 3-methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,3-dicyclohexylpropane, n- heptadecane, l,l'-(l,4-butanediyl)-cyclohexane, n-octadecane, 1,1-dicyclohexylpropane, and containing less than 0.2 wt-% oxygen.
  • FIG. 1 schematically illustrates the process of the present application.
  • the present invention relates to a process for producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, wherein the lignin oil is treated in a reactor in the presence of catalyst and hydrogen.
  • the lignin oil used as starting material for the process has an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number (TAN) of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil (ISO 660 standard).
  • TAN total acid number
  • the lignin oil used herein may contain no water, or 1% water and 25% oxygen.
  • the weight average molecular weight is determined by gel permeation chromatography (GPC) with tetrahydrofuran as the solvent and where the standard is polystyrene.
  • GPC gel permeation chromatography
  • the lignin oil can be obtained by a process, which is described in detail in the applications PCT/SE2015/050969 and PCT/SE2015/050970.
  • a black liquor composition comprising kraft black liquor and having a hydroxide ion concentration of 1-40 g/l, based on the volume of black liquor, is reacted, preferably under a H 2 or H 2 /CO syngas pressure of 5- 150 bar, at 220-350 °C for 10-120 minutes in the absence of a solid catalyst; or at 180-240 °C for 10-120 minutes in the presence of a solid catalyst, thereby causing depolymerization of lignin in the black liquor.
  • the reacted composition is then cooled to a temperature below the boiling point of a solvent to be added subsequently, and is thereafter acidified until a pH of 4-5 is reached; and a solvent is added to the composition in order to extract oil from the composition, and the composition is separated by phase separation in a first separation step into an oil phase comprising solvent, oil, and organic acids; a first water phase comprising water, salts, and non-depolymerized lignin solids; and a second water phase comprising water and salts.
  • the oil phase is filtered to remove any particles, and is then desalted in a water wash step by adding water and separating by phase separation into a second separation step into an oil phase comprising oil and solvent, and a water phase comprising salts; or by adding adsorbent and/or absorbent material or ion exchange material, or combinations thereof; and solvent comprised in the oil phase is evaporated, whereby the lignin oil is obtained.
  • bio-oils originated from different plant species (e.g. wood, sawdust, switchgrass, crop, straw, sugar cane bagasse) and produced in various ways giving a unique composition for each of them.
  • a well-known technology is pyrolysis which is to heat biomass at 300-900 °C in the absence of air.
  • Slow, intermediate and fast pyrolysis of almost dry (typically 4-10% moisture content) feedstock such as pine sawdust or wood chips give a pyrolysis oil of unique components and all pyrolysis oils generally contains 12-40% water and 35-40% oxygen attached to the organic components reflecting the low heating value of 16- 19 MJ/kg.
  • the water is part of the oil and the water/oil do not phase separate, meaning that the pyrolysis oil is an emulsion.
  • the physical state of the pyrolysis oil and the range of oil components and the water content are all different to the lignin oil developed for the present process, as the lignin oil used herein typically contains no water or 1% water and 25% oxygen.
  • the oil components obtained from pyrolysis of lignocellulosic (typically wood) material will be much broader (typically over 300 compounds) compared with the lignin oil used herein, as the feedstock contains cellulose and all other woody components.
  • a 13 C NMR spectrum of typical components obtained from pyrolysis is shown below (Zhang et al. in Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.5b00968, the supporting information).
  • pyrolysis oils are known to be very acidic (pH 2-3) which is another difference to the lignin oil herein. By the differences described above the same results would not be expected if a pyrolysis oil was used as feedstock for the technology developed for the present process. This hypothesis is supported by D.C. Elliott et al. in Environ. Prog. Sustain. Energy 2009, 28(3), 441-449, which indicated that pyrolysis oil requires a two-step process utilizing different catalysts (hydrotreatment at 310 or 375 °C and hydrocracking at 400 °C) to reach an almost oxygen free hydrocarbon product.
  • liquefaction oil shows the same issues as for the pyrolysis oil i.e. high water content, typically 18%, acidic, and a the whole range of woody components even though the oxygen content is lower, typically 15-20%.
  • This bio-oil is also not expected to perform as the lignin oil used in the present process.
  • the lignin oil used as starting material for the process is preferably first passed through a desalting unit, comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof, prior to the reactor in order to reduce metals such as sodium and potassium.
  • a desalting unit comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof, prior to the reactor in order to reduce metals such as sodium and potassium.
  • Both the desalting unit and the reactor can be operated solvent-free or with a solvent. It may be desirable to add additional viscosity modifying, and/or lubricating and/or carbonium/arenium ion scavenging components to the lignin oil before feeding it into the reactor, and before a possible desalting unit.
  • the additional components can be a
  • a solvent preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, p-cymene, anisole, diesel, gasoline, benzyl alcohol; or additives such as phenol, 2-naphthol, catechol, thymol, guaiacol, cresol; and/or mixtures thereof; and the hydrocarbon product obtained by the present process.
  • additional components can be added in an amount of 1-80 wt-% based on the weight of the lignin oil prior to the reactor and any desalting unit, said.
  • the preferred option is to use no solvent or only a small amount of solvent, such as 10-20 wt% based on the weight of the lignin oil in order to reduce the viscosity of the oil and to reduce the pressure drop over the reactor.
  • the solvent added to the lignin oil before the reactor or the desalting unit can be the whole hydrocarbon product or a fraction of the hydrocarbon product.
  • the solvent also functions as a lubricant for the reactor. It has been found that the reactor lubricant function is also applicable for the process of making the lignin oil as defined in the applications
  • PCT/SE2015/050969 and PCT/SE2015/050970 meaning that the whole hydrocarbon product or a hydrocarbon fraction can be added to the black liquor prior producing the lignin oil.
  • a polar solvent can be added, preferably methanol alone or methanol/benzyl alcohol mixture or ethanol alone or ethanol/methanol/benzyl alcohol mixture or a mixture of toluene/methanol or toluene/ethanol, where the methanol can be a non-pure methanol obtained from the kraft mill process.
  • the process for producing the hydrocarbon product according to the present invention comprises treatment of the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more selected catalysts and under application of a H 2 pressure.
  • the catalyst is one or more of a
  • the reaction takes place at a H 2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200-2000 l/l (STP conditions), preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature of 290- 400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and with a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.25-2 h "1 , preferably 0.5-1 h "1 .
  • GTO gas to oil ratio
  • LHSV liquid hourly space velocity
  • the reactor is typically a reactor comprising a packed bed, which includes three different sections.
  • the packed bed is comprised of inert filling material and/or guard material.
  • the guard material can be a material of high specific surface area, such as alumina, and serves to minimize catalyst deactivation which can be caused by impurities in the lignin oil, and hence extending the catalyst lifetime. Some of the guard bed is sometimes replaced by inert filling material.
  • the first section of the packed bed may optionally also comprise catalysts selected as defined above, in an amount of up to 100%.
  • the packed bed is comprised the catalyst selected as defined above.
  • an amount of guard material can be placed on top of the catalyst in the second section.
  • the catalysts are preferably in the form of powder or extrudates.
  • the second section does typically not comprise any inert material.
  • the packed bed is comprised inert filling material, and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above, in an amount of up to 100%.
  • the lignin oil passes first the first section, then the second section, and then the third section.
  • the lignin oil and H 2 are fed at the top of the reactor, and moves downward through the packed bed.
  • the products are taken out at the bottom of the reactor.
  • the reactor is suitably a trickle bed reactor, i.e. a reactor that uses a downward movement of a liquid and gas over a packed bed of catalyst particles.
  • Hydrodesulfurization catalysts can be activated in an activation procedure, which is sometimes called sulfidation, and includes e.g. pumping a dimethyldisulfide (DMDS) spiked mixture of paraffinic activation feed along with a hydrogen flow at a certain pressure through the catalyst bed.
  • DMDS dimethyldisulfide
  • the DMDS generates H 2 S during its decomposition, which in turn sulfides the catalyst.
  • Hydrodeoxygenation catalysts can be dried and activated by the following chosen method; ramping up the temperature (1 K/min) from room temperature to 150 °C during 13 h in an atmospheric nitrogen flow rate of 20 l/h and then ramping up the hydrogen pressure (1 bar/min) to 31 bar hydrogen during 0.7 h at a hydrogen flow rate of 20 l/h followed by an immediate start of ramping up the temperature (1 K/min) to 400 °C for 8.5 h at a hydrogen flow rate of 87 l/h. After 2 h hold at 400 °C the temperature is preferably cooled down for 13.5 h to reach 150 °C, keeping the same hydrogen pressure and flow. This activation procedure is sometimes called reduction.
  • the reactor is loaded with the catalysts, i.e. hydrodesulfurization catalyst and/or
  • hydrodeoxygenation catalyst and/or cracking catalyst and inert filling material, and optionally guard material It has been found that hydrodesulfurization catalysts can by themselves also give near 100% hydrodeoxygenation and some cracking.
  • hydrodesulfurization catalyst NiMo on alumina and the combined hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite are hydrodesulfurization catalyst NiMo on alumina and the combined hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite.
  • the volume ratio of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1.
  • a physical mixture is meant that the catalyst extrudates or powder is well blended so as to form a packed bed of catalysts, in which the two different catalysts are evenly distributed, so as to form a homogenous catalyst bed.
  • the intimacy of active sites for hydrogenation and hydrocracking is best when a physical mixture of the hydrogenation and hydrocracking catalyst is used.
  • the carbonium ion formed by hydrocracking can be saturated immediately by hydrogen, which will be supported by the metal site of the hydrogenation catalyst close to the carbonium ion.
  • high pressure hydrogen and a high gas to oil (GTO) ratio minimize any re- polymerization or re-bonding of reactive carbonium or arenium ions, carbanions, oxiranes or radicals that are generated by zeolitic cracking. It has been found that a catalyst packed bed in the form of a combined catalyst physical mixture can give substantially lower pressure drop as compared to a packed bed wherein the catalysts are not packed as a physical mixture. This indicates that close packing of two catalysts is beneficial for operational runnability of the process. It has also been found that the product result of this combination of catalysts is a hydrocarbon product of lower boiling points, without creating more very light hydrocarbons in the gas phase.
  • GTO gas to oil
  • An alternative preferred catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of the hydrodeoxygenation catalyst Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and the combined
  • hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite The volume ratio of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1. This combination of catalysts and packing in the reactor gives the same or a similar result as the above mentioned physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite.
  • the reactor preferably comprises a pre-heating zone and an isothermal zone.
  • the preheating zone the lignin oil is pre-heated to reach the reaction temperature, and the temperature in the pre-heating zone is thus 1-10 °C below the reaction temperature.
  • the lignin oil temperature in the isothermal zone is the same as the reaction temperature 290- 400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C.
  • the isothermal zone comprises the second section of the packed bed comprising the catalysts, and optionally a portion of the first section of the packed bed comprising guard material.
  • the isothermal zone preferably deviates less than ⁇ 1 K from the target value for the reaction temperature, and the pre-heating zone above the catalyst preferably deviates less than ⁇ 10 K from the target value for the reaction
  • the heating is typically obtained by means of a heating jacket, electricity or furnace based heating.
  • the products leaving the reactor are cooled by a heat exchanger to 25-30 °C, and are left to separate in a decanting unit.
  • the non-condensable gases can be led to a gas treater to remove select gases such as H 2 S and C0 2 and hydrogen is separated from the other gaseous products to be recycled into the process.
  • the rest of the gaseous products contains very light hydrocarbons and are preferably led to a steam reformer producing H 2 and CO or C0 2 , wherein H 2 and CO are optionally led back to the process.
  • Another option is to recycle both hydrogen and gaseous products as carbon monoxide and methane can serve as reductive gas.
  • the liquid products are hydrocarbons with a wide range of boiling point and water.
  • the water is a result from the hydrodeoxygenation of the lignin oil and can be led back to the kraft mill.
  • the hydrocarbons may be distilled, in a distillation unit (4), into three fractions of different boiling point range.
  • the hydrocarbon product can thus be separated into three fractions by means of distillation, wherein a first fraction is named light hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C, a second fraction is named heavy hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and a third fraction is named very heavy hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C.
  • the whole hydrocarbon product itself may serve as jet fuel.
  • the hydrocarbon products are mainly cycloalkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons and the fraction with a boiling point below 180 °C are suitable as gasoline whereas hydrocarbons with a boiling point between 180 and 340 °C are suitable as diesel.
  • the fraction with boiling points above 340 °C may be used as fuel oil or being recycled in this process for further cracking.
  • Another possible use of these hydrocarbons is to make chemicals for the non-fuel market.
  • Of particular interest is a fraction which can be separated from the second fraction and has a boiling point of 250-285 °C.
  • the hydrocarbon product obtained by the above process comprises the following
  • ethylcyclopentane propylcyclohexane, propyl-benzene, l-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl) cyclohexane, butylcyclohexane, decalin, tetralin, methyltetralin, butylbenzene, decahydro-2- methylnaphthalene, pentylcyclohexane, hexylcyclohexane, diethylcyclohexane, bicyclohexyl, biphenylmethane, l-methyl-2-cyclohexylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane,
  • benzylcyclohexane methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,2-dicyclohexylethane, 1-phenyl-l- cyclohexylethane, l-phenyl-2-2cyclohexylethane, cyclohexylethylbenzene, dibenzyl, 4- methyldiphenylmethane, 3-methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,3-dicyclohexylpropane, n- heptadecane, l,l'-(l,4-butanediyl)-cyclohexane, n-octadecane, 1,1-dicyclohexylpropane, and it contains less than 0.2 wt-% oxygen.
  • FIG. 1 schematically illustrates an example of the above described process.
  • the lignin oil starting material is fed into a desalting unit (1) which comprises a guard bed (Gl) including adsorbent, ion exchanger and/or absorbent material.
  • the desalted oil is then fed into a reactor (2), shown here as a trickle bed reactor, which includes a packed bed comprising a first section (G2/i) comprised of guard material and/or inert material, and a second section (C) comprised catalyst material and optionally an upper portion of guard material (G2), and a third section (i) comprised of inert material.
  • the reactor (2) comprises a pre-heated zone (5) and an isothermal zone (6).
  • the resulting composition is cooled in a heat exchanger (7) and is the left to separate in a decanting unit (3), into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon phase (HC) and a water phase (W).
  • the water separated in the decanting unit can be led back to the kraft mill.
  • Gaseous products are led to a gas treater where H 2 S is removed, and H 2 is then separated and recycled to the reactor, and the rest of the gases are retrieved as a gaseous hydrocarbon containing product.
  • the liquid hydrocarbon phase (HC) is distilled (D) in a distillation unit (4) into three fractions where the first fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C (HC1), a second fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and (HC2), and a third fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C (HC3).
  • the inert filler below the catalyst was SiC with a particle size of 125-160 ⁇ .
  • the inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt-% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
  • the pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2382 mbar.
  • the overall conversion was very high at 310 and 330 °C.
  • the hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix of hydrocarbons (analyzed by off-line GC-MS) shown below.
  • GC-MS analysis indicate no oxygenates, not even for a derivatized sample.
  • the water product also contain no oxygenates.
  • the sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 23 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C.
  • a transparent and colorless hydrocarbon product was collected after 4 days at 330 °C whereas at lower temperatures a weak green coloring was observed.
  • the heat value of the hydrocarbon product was 43.8 MJ/kg.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
  • the pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2384 mbar.
  • the overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C.
  • the hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix of hydrocarbons (analyzed by off-line GC-MS) shown below.
  • the sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 35 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C.
  • a transparent and weakly colored hydrocarbon product was collected after 4 days at 330 °C whereas after 6.5 days at 310 °C the weak coloring swift from being green to orange like.
  • the packing design was a physical mixture of the hydrodesulfurization catalyst and the hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst at a volume ratio of 2:1 within the isothermal zone.
  • the pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst alone.
  • the inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 ⁇ .
  • the inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
  • the overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C.
  • the hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C.
  • the hydrocarbon product was shown to contain more components of lower boiling points without creating more CI and C2 in the gas phase.
  • the sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 63 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C
  • Example 2 A transparent and less weakly colored hydrocarbon product than Example 2 was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was slightly more progressed than Example 1.
  • the hydrocarbon product was grouped by GC-MS analysis into the following component classes where the area-% of the hydrocarbons can be estimated to be weight-%, not the oxygen or nitrogen components due to a different GC-MS response factor. Components Area-%
  • the packing design was a NiMo on alumina catalyst on top of the physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and zeolite catalyst at a volume ratio of 1:1 within the isothermal zone.
  • the pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst.
  • the inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 ⁇ .
  • the inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt-% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging. The overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix no different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C.
  • the pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 1354 mbar indicating a higher pressure drop for a stack of catalysts compared with physical mix in Example 3.
  • the sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 23 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C.
  • Example 5 A transparent and equally weakly colored hydrocarbon product as Example 3 was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was more progressed than Example 1 and 3.
  • Example 5 A transparent and equally weakly colored hydrocarbon product as Example 3 was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was more progressed than Example 1 and 3.
  • a guard (alumina of high surface area and low NiMo content) and a hydrodesulfurization catalyst, NiMo on alumina, were loaded in the reactor.
  • the packing design was a guard bed on top of the hydrodesulfurization catalyst at a volume ratio of 1:2 within the isothermal zone.
  • the pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst alone.
  • the inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 ⁇ .
  • the inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% crude bio-oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
  • the pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2383 mbar.
  • the overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C.
  • the hydrogen consumption was 40-60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix no different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C.
  • the pressure drop was 2383 mbar indicating similar pressure drop as Example 1 and 2.
  • the sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 89 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C
  • hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite
  • the packing design was a physical mixture of the hydrodeoxygenation catalyst and the hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst at a volume ratio of 2:1 within the isothermal zone.
  • the pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodeoxygenation catalyst alone.
  • the inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 ⁇ .
  • the inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
  • the lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol.
  • the operating conditions were set to the following:
  • the process was operating continuously for 1 day- without issues.
  • the overall conversion is very high at 330 °C.
  • the hydrogen consumption was 80 % of the hydrogen flow during the first day giving a hydrocarbon product mix similar to example 1.
  • a transparent and colorless hydrocarbon product was collected after 1 day at 330 °C.

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Abstract

A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, said lignin oil having an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil, wherein the process for producing the hydrocarbon product comprises the steps of treating the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more of a hydrodesulfurization catalyst selected from NiMo on alumina or CoMo on alumina; or a hydrodesulfurization and cracking catalyst selected from NiMo on zeolite or CoMo on zeolite, or a hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst selected from NiO on zeolite, zeolite alone or combinations thereof, or a hydrodeoxygenation catalyst selected from Ni/NiO, Cu/Cr, Pd/Cu, or Pt on a support material, such as chromite and/or alumina and/or zirconia and/or graphite and/or carbon and/or silica; or combinations thereof, and applying a H2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200- 2000 l/l, preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature of 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and with a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.25-2 h-1 and preferably 0.5-1 h-1 followed by cooling the reaction product from the reactor to 20-30 °C, and separating the reaction product by phase separation, into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon product phase, and a water phase, thereby obtaining the hydrocarbon product, and a hydrocarbon product.

Description

A PROCESS FOR PRODUCING A HYDROCARBON PRODUCT FROM LIGNIN OIL TECHNICAL FIELD
The present application relates to a process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil, and a hydrocarbon product obtainable by the process. BACKGROUND ART
There is a desire to provide renewable sources for hydrocarbon products for use as fuels and for manufacture of chemicals. There is also a desire to recover lignin and chemicals from spent black liquor, and methods for that are known in the art, for example WO2014/193289 describes a method in which lignin is precipitated from black liquor by means of an acid treatment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention aims at providing a process for producing renewable hydrocarbon products from a lignin based oil.
The process of the present application relates to producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, wherein the lignin oil has an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil. The process for producing the hydrocarbon product comprises the steps of treating the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more of a hydrodesulfurization catalyst selected from NiMo on alumina or CoMo on alumina; or a hydrodesulfurization and cracking catalyst selected from NiMo on zeolite or CoMo on zeolite, or a hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst selected from NiO on zeolite, zeolite alone or combinations thereof, or a hydrodeoxygenation catalyst selected from Ni/NiO, Cu/Cr, Pd/Cu, or Pt on a support material, such as chromite and/or alumina and/or zirconia and/or graphite and/or carbon and/or silica; or combinations thereof, and applying a H2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200-2000 l/l (STP conditions), preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature of 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and with a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.25-2 h 1 and preferably 0.5-1 h 1 followed by cooling the reaction product from the reactor to 20-30 °C, and separating the reaction product by phase separation, into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon product phase, and a water phase, thereby obtaining the hydrocarbon product.
The reactor used in the process is preferably a reactor comprising a packed bed, which includes a first section of inert filling material and/or guard material and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above and a second section of the catalyst selected as defined above and optionally a guard material on top of the catalyst, and a third section of inert filling material and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above, and wherein the lignin oil passes first the first section, then the second section, and then the third section.
The reactor preferably comprises a pre-heating zone and an isothermal zone, wherein the lignin oil temperature in the isothermal zone is the reaction temperature 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and the lignin oil temperature in the pre-heating zone is 1-10 °C below the reaction temperature, and wherein the isothermal zone comprises the second section of the packed bed, and optionally a portion of the first section of the packed bed.
The catalyst in the second section is advantageously a physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite, and the volume ratio of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite is preferably 1-4:1, more preferably 1.5-2.5:1, most preferably 2:1. Alternatively, the catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite, preferably with a volume ratio of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, more preferably 1.5-2.5:1, most preferably 2:1.
The process resulting hydrocarbon product is preferably separated into three fractions by means of distillation, wherein a first fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C, a second fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and
a third fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C.
A fraction having a boiling point of 250-285 °C is separated from the hydrocarbon product, said fraction comprising dibenzyl, cyclohexylethylbenzene, 4-methyldiphenylmethane, benzylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane and 1,2-dicyclohexylethane may be of particular interest.
The gaseous phase separated in the phase separation is preferably led through a gas treater, whereby H2S is removed, and H2 is then separated and recycled to the reactor, and the rest of the gases are retrieved as a gaseous hydrocarbon containing product. The gaseous hydrocarbon containing product may be led to a steam reformer producing H2and CO or C02, wherein H2 and CO are optionally led back to the process.
Preferably, the lignin oil is desalted in a desalting unit prior to the reactor, said desalting unit comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof.
Moreover, additional viscosity modifying, and/or lubricating and/or carbonium/arenium ion scavenging components may be added to the lignin oil in an amount of 1-80 wt-%, preferably 10-20 wt% based on the weight of the lignin oil prior to the reactor and any desalting unit, said additional components being a combination of a solvent, preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, p-cymene, anisole, diesel, gasoline, benzyl alcohol; or phenol, 2- naphthol, catechol, thymol, guaiacol, cresol; and/or mixtures thereof, and the hydrocarbon product obtained by the process.
The lignin oil fed into the process is most preferably a lignin oil obtainable by a process in which a black liquor composition comprising kraft black liquor and having a hydroxide ion concentration of 1-40 g/l, based on the volume of black liquor, is reacted, preferably under a H2 or H2/CO syngas pressure of 5-150 bar, at 220-350 °C for 10-120 minutes in the absence of a solid catalyst; or at 180-240 °C for 10-120 minutes in the presence of a solid catalyst, thereby causing depolymerization of lignin in the black liquor; the reacted composition is cooled to a temperature below the boiling point of a solvent to be added subsequently, and is thereafter acidified until a pH of 4-5 is reached; and a solvent is added to the composition in order to extract oil from the composition, and the composition is separated by phase separation in a first separation step into an oil phase comprising solvent, oil, and organic acids; a first water phase comprising water, salts, and non-depolymerized lignin solids; and a second water phase comprising water and salts; the oil phase is filtered to remove any particles, and is then desalted in a water wash step by adding water and separating by phase separation into a second separation step into an oil phase comprising oil and solvent, and a water phase comprising salts; or by adding adsorbent and/or absorbent material or ion exchange material, or combinations thereof; and solvent comprised in the oil phase is evaporated, whereby the lignin oil is obtained. The present invention also relates to a hydrocarbon product obtained by the above process said product comprising cyclohexane, methylcyclohexane, toluene, ethylcyclohexane, ethylcyclopentane, propylcyclohexane, propylbenzene, l-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl) cyclohexane, butylcyclohexane, decalin, tetralin, methyltetralin, butylbenzene, decahydro-2- methylnaphthalene, pentylcyclohexane, hexylcyclohexane, diethylcyclohexane, bicyclohexyl, biphenylmethane, l-methyl-2-cyclohexylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane,
benzylcyclohexane, methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,2-dicyclohexylethane, 1-phenyl-l- cyclohexylethane, l-phenyl-2-2cyclohexylethane, cyclohexylethylbenzene, dibenzyl, 4- methyldiphenylmethane, 3-methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,3-dicyclohexylpropane, n- heptadecane, l,l'-(l,4-butanediyl)-cyclohexane, n-octadecane, 1,1-dicyclohexylpropane, and containing less than 0.2 wt-% oxygen.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure 1 schematically illustrates the process of the present application. DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The present invention relates to a process for producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, wherein the lignin oil is treated in a reactor in the presence of catalyst and hydrogen. The lignin oil used as starting material for the process has an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number (TAN) of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil (ISO 660 standard). For example, the lignin oil used herein may contain no water, or 1% water and 25% oxygen. The weight average molecular weight is determined by gel permeation chromatography (GPC) with tetrahydrofuran as the solvent and where the standard is polystyrene. The lignin oil can be obtained by a process, which is described in detail in the applications PCT/SE2015/050969 and PCT/SE2015/050970. In this process a black liquor composition comprising kraft black liquor and having a hydroxide ion concentration of 1-40 g/l, based on the volume of black liquor, is reacted, preferably under a H2 or H2/CO syngas pressure of 5- 150 bar, at 220-350 °C for 10-120 minutes in the absence of a solid catalyst; or at 180-240 °C for 10-120 minutes in the presence of a solid catalyst, thereby causing depolymerization of lignin in the black liquor. The reacted composition is then cooled to a temperature below the boiling point of a solvent to be added subsequently, and is thereafter acidified until a pH of 4-5 is reached; and a solvent is added to the composition in order to extract oil from the composition, and the composition is separated by phase separation in a first separation step into an oil phase comprising solvent, oil, and organic acids; a first water phase comprising water, salts, and non-depolymerized lignin solids; and a second water phase comprising water and salts. The oil phase is filtered to remove any particles, and is then desalted in a water wash step by adding water and separating by phase separation into a second separation step into an oil phase comprising oil and solvent, and a water phase comprising salts; or by adding adsorbent and/or absorbent material or ion exchange material, or combinations thereof; and solvent comprised in the oil phase is evaporated, whereby the lignin oil is obtained.
There is a large range of different bio-oils originated from different plant species (e.g. wood, sawdust, switchgrass, crop, straw, sugar cane bagasse) and produced in various ways giving a unique composition for each of them. A well-known technology is pyrolysis which is to heat biomass at 300-900 °C in the absence of air. Slow, intermediate and fast pyrolysis of almost dry (typically 4-10% moisture content) feedstock such as pine sawdust or wood chips give a pyrolysis oil of unique components and all pyrolysis oils generally contains 12-40% water and 35-40% oxygen attached to the organic components reflecting the low heating value of 16- 19 MJ/kg. The water is part of the oil and the water/oil do not phase separate, meaning that the pyrolysis oil is an emulsion. The physical state of the pyrolysis oil and the range of oil components and the water content are all different to the lignin oil developed for the present process, as the lignin oil used herein typically contains no water or 1% water and 25% oxygen. The oil components obtained from pyrolysis of lignocellulosic (typically wood) material will be much broader (typically over 300 compounds) compared with the lignin oil used herein, as the feedstock contains cellulose and all other woody components. A 13C NMR spectrum of typical components obtained from pyrolysis is shown below (Zhang et al. in Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.5b00968, the supporting information).
Figure imgf000007_0001
A typical GC-MS spectrum and corresponding components at specific retention times (r.t.) of the lignin oil used in the present process are displayed below, and shows the following components.
Figure imgf000007_0002
T ms 'msn)
r.t. Component
9.40 3-oxobutanoic acid
10.80 4-methyl-4-hydroxy-2-pentanone
10.99 phenol 11.39 2-hydroxypropanoic acid
11.44 hydroxyisobutyric acid
11.70 hydroxyacetic acid
13.07 2-hydroxybutanoic acid
14.66 4-hydroxypentenoic acid
14.93 2-hydroxypentanoic acid
15.46 guaiacol
17.93 catechol
18.19 butanedioic acid
19.78 4-methylcatechol
21.09 2-hydroxy-2-hexenoic acid
21.56 4-hydroxyphenylethanol
24.77 Internal standard
25.20 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyacetophenone
29.56 phenylacetic acid
30.70 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid?
39.81 dehydroabietic acid
40.27 abietic acid
Also, pyrolysis oils are known to be very acidic (pH 2-3) which is another difference to the lignin oil herein. By the differences described above the same results would not be expected if a pyrolysis oil was used as feedstock for the technology developed for the present process. This hypothesis is supported by D.C. Elliott et al. in Environ. Prog. Sustain. Energy 2009, 28(3), 441-449, which indicated that pyrolysis oil requires a two-step process utilizing different catalysts (hydrotreatment at 310 or 375 °C and hydrocracking at 400 °C) to reach an almost oxygen free hydrocarbon product.
Other processes such as liquefaction of biomass (liquefaction oil) show the same issues as for the pyrolysis oil i.e. high water content, typically 18%, acidic, and a the whole range of woody components even though the oxygen content is lower, typically 15-20%. This bio-oil is also not expected to perform as the lignin oil used in the present process.
The lignin oil used as starting material for the process is preferably first passed through a desalting unit, comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof, prior to the reactor in order to reduce metals such as sodium and potassium.
Both the desalting unit and the reactor can be operated solvent-free or with a solvent. It may be desirable to add additional viscosity modifying, and/or lubricating and/or carbonium/arenium ion scavenging components to the lignin oil before feeding it into the reactor, and before a possible desalting unit. The additional components can be a
combination of a solvent, preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, p-cymene, anisole, diesel, gasoline, benzyl alcohol; or additives such as phenol, 2-naphthol, catechol, thymol, guaiacol, cresol; and/or mixtures thereof; and the hydrocarbon product obtained by the present process. These additional components can be added in an amount of 1-80 wt-% based on the weight of the lignin oil prior to the reactor and any desalting unit, said. The preferred option is to use no solvent or only a small amount of solvent, such as 10-20 wt% based on the weight of the lignin oil in order to reduce the viscosity of the oil and to reduce the pressure drop over the reactor.
The solvent added to the lignin oil before the reactor or the desalting unit can be the whole hydrocarbon product or a fraction of the hydrocarbon product. The solvent also functions as a lubricant for the reactor. It has been found that the reactor lubricant function is also applicable for the process of making the lignin oil as defined in the applications
PCT/SE2015/050969 and PCT/SE2015/050970, meaning that the whole hydrocarbon product or a hydrocarbon fraction can be added to the black liquor prior producing the lignin oil.
To improve the solubility of the hydrocarbon or a fraction of the hydrocarbon product in the lignin oil a polar solvent can be added, preferably methanol alone or methanol/benzyl alcohol mixture or ethanol alone or ethanol/methanol/benzyl alcohol mixture or a mixture of toluene/methanol or toluene/ethanol, where the methanol can be a non-pure methanol obtained from the kraft mill process.
The process for producing the hydrocarbon product according to the present invention comprises treatment of the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more selected catalysts and under application of a H2 pressure. The catalyst is one or more of a
hydrodesulfurization catalyst selected from NiMo on alumina or CoMo on alumina; or a hydrodesulfurization and cracking catalyst selected from NiMo on zeolite or CoMo on zeolite, or a hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst selected from NiO on zeolite, zeolite alone or combinations thereof, or a hydrodeoxygenation catalyst selected from Ni/NiO, Cu/Cr, Pd/Cu, or Pt on a support material, such as chromite and/or alumina and/or zirconia and/or graphite and/or carbon (e.g. charcoal or activated carbon) and/or silica; or one or more hydrodeoxygenation and a cracking catalyst selected from Cu/Cr, Cu/Ni, or NiO on zeolite or zeolite alone, or combinations thereof,
The reaction takes place at a H2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200-2000 l/l (STP conditions), preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature of 290- 400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and with a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.25-2 h"1, preferably 0.5-1 h"1. After the reactor, the reaction product is cooled to 20-30 °C, and is then separated by phase separation, into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon product phase, and a water phase, so as to obtain the hydrocarbon product.
The reactor is typically a reactor comprising a packed bed, which includes three different sections. In a first section the packed bed is comprised of inert filling material and/or guard material. The guard material can be a material of high specific surface area, such as alumina, and serves to minimize catalyst deactivation which can be caused by impurities in the lignin oil, and hence extending the catalyst lifetime. Some of the guard bed is sometimes replaced by inert filling material. The first section of the packed bed may optionally also comprise catalysts selected as defined above, in an amount of up to 100%.
In a second section the packed bed is comprised the catalyst selected as defined above. Optionally, an amount of guard material can be placed on top of the catalyst in the second section. The catalysts are preferably in the form of powder or extrudates. The second section does typically not comprise any inert material. In a third section the packed bed is comprised inert filling material, and optionally a catalyst selected as defined above, in an amount of up to 100%. The lignin oil passes first the first section, then the second section, and then the third section. The lignin oil and H2 are fed at the top of the reactor, and moves downward through the packed bed. The products are taken out at the bottom of the reactor. The reactor is suitably a trickle bed reactor, i.e. a reactor that uses a downward movement of a liquid and gas over a packed bed of catalyst particles.
Prior taking the reactor into operation the catalysts typically needs to be dried and activated. A nitrogen flow is preferably used for inert flushing, drying the catalysts and compacting the bed of catalysts Hydrodesulfurization catalysts can be activated in an activation procedure, which is sometimes called sulfidation, and includes e.g. pumping a dimethyldisulfide (DMDS) spiked mixture of paraffinic activation feed along with a hydrogen flow at a certain pressure through the catalyst bed. The DMDS generates H2S during its decomposition, which in turn sulfides the catalyst. Hydrodeoxygenation catalysts can be dried and activated by the following chosen method; ramping up the temperature (1 K/min) from room temperature to 150 °C during 13 h in an atmospheric nitrogen flow rate of 20 l/h and then ramping up the hydrogen pressure (1 bar/min) to 31 bar hydrogen during 0.7 h at a hydrogen flow rate of 20 l/h followed by an immediate start of ramping up the temperature (1 K/min) to 400 °C for 8.5 h at a hydrogen flow rate of 87 l/h. After 2 h hold at 400 °C the temperature is preferably cooled down for 13.5 h to reach 150 °C, keeping the same hydrogen pressure and flow. This activation procedure is sometimes called reduction.
The reactor is loaded with the catalysts, i.e. hydrodesulfurization catalyst and/or
hydrodeoxygenation catalyst and/or cracking catalyst and inert filling material, and optionally guard material. It has been found that hydrodesulfurization catalysts can by themselves also give near 100% hydrodeoxygenation and some cracking.
During the hydrodeoxygenation and the hydrodesulfurization processes that take place in the reactor, the oxygen and the sulfur is removed from the lignin oil by catalytic
hydrogenolysis according to the two general equations below;
1) CnHmO + H2 -> CnHm + H20
2) CnHmS + H2 -> CnHm + H2S
where CnHm represents the lignin oil. The oxygen and sulfur attached to the lignin also represents functional groups containing oxygen and sulfur such as OH, SH and OR where R is any carbon or carbon chain.
The high pressure of hydrogen which is applied gives a high solubility of the hydrogen in the lignin oil, and thereby high availability of hydrogen next to the catalyst surface. When water is created the availability of hydrogen reduces as the solubility of hydrogen in water is low and this is even worse if the starting oil contains a lot of water, as is the case in for example pyrolysis oil or liquefaction oil. The catalyst in the second section is preferably a physical mixture of the
hydrodesulfurization catalyst NiMo on alumina and the combined hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite. The volume ratio of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1. By a physical mixture is meant that the catalyst extrudates or powder is well blended so as to form a packed bed of catalysts, in which the two different catalysts are evenly distributed, so as to form a homogenous catalyst bed.
The intimacy of active sites for hydrogenation and hydrocracking is best when a physical mixture of the hydrogenation and hydrocracking catalyst is used. In this case, the carbonium ion formed by hydrocracking can be saturated immediately by hydrogen, which will be supported by the metal site of the hydrogenation catalyst close to the carbonium ion.
Also, high pressure hydrogen and a high gas to oil (GTO) ratio minimize any re- polymerization or re-bonding of reactive carbonium or arenium ions, carbanions, oxiranes or radicals that are generated by zeolitic cracking. It has been found that a catalyst packed bed in the form of a combined catalyst physical mixture can give substantially lower pressure drop as compared to a packed bed wherein the catalysts are not packed as a physical mixture. This indicates that close packing of two catalysts is beneficial for operational runnability of the process. It has also been found that the product result of this combination of catalysts is a hydrocarbon product of lower boiling points, without creating more very light hydrocarbons in the gas phase.
An alternative preferred catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of the hydrodeoxygenation catalyst Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and the combined
hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst NiO on zeolite. The volume ratio of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1. This combination of catalysts and packing in the reactor gives the same or a similar result as the above mentioned physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite.
The reactor preferably comprises a pre-heating zone and an isothermal zone. In the preheating zone the lignin oil is pre-heated to reach the reaction temperature, and the temperature in the pre-heating zone is thus 1-10 °C below the reaction temperature. The lignin oil temperature in the isothermal zone is the same as the reaction temperature 290- 400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C. The isothermal zone comprises the second section of the packed bed comprising the catalysts, and optionally a portion of the first section of the packed bed comprising guard material. The isothermal zone preferably deviates less than ±1 K from the target value for the reaction temperature, and the pre-heating zone above the catalyst preferably deviates less than ±10 K from the target value for the reaction
temperature, and the same applies for the third section comprised of inert filling material below the second section comprising catalyst in the isothermal zone. The heating is typically obtained by means of a heating jacket, electricity or furnace based heating.
The products leaving the reactor are cooled by a heat exchanger to 25-30 °C, and are left to separate in a decanting unit. The non-condensable gases can be led to a gas treater to remove select gases such as H2S and C02 and hydrogen is separated from the other gaseous products to be recycled into the process. The rest of the gaseous products contains very light hydrocarbons and are preferably led to a steam reformer producing H2and CO or C02, wherein H2 and CO are optionally led back to the process. Another option is to recycle both hydrogen and gaseous products as carbon monoxide and methane can serve as reductive gas.
The liquid products are hydrocarbons with a wide range of boiling point and water. The water is a result from the hydrodeoxygenation of the lignin oil and can be led back to the kraft mill. The hydrocarbons may be distilled, in a distillation unit (4), into three fractions of different boiling point range. The hydrocarbon product can thus be separated into three fractions by means of distillation, wherein a first fraction is named light hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C, a second fraction is named heavy hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and a third fraction is named very heavy hydrocarbons and comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C.
The whole hydrocarbon product itself may serve as jet fuel. The hydrocarbon products are mainly cycloalkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons and the fraction with a boiling point below 180 °C are suitable as gasoline whereas hydrocarbons with a boiling point between 180 and 340 °C are suitable as diesel. The fraction with boiling points above 340 °C may be used as fuel oil or being recycled in this process for further cracking. Another possible use of these hydrocarbons is to make chemicals for the non-fuel market. Of particular interest is a fraction which can be separated from the second fraction and has a boiling point of 250-285 °C. This fraction comprises dibenzyl, cyclohexylethylbenzene, 4- methyldiphenylmethane, benzylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane and 1,2- dicyclohexylethane, which can be used in the manufacture of chemicals for the non-fuel market.
The hydrocarbon product obtained by the above process comprises the following
compounds: cyclohexane, methylcyclohexane, toluene, ethylcyclohexane,
ethylcyclopentane, propylcyclohexane, propyl-benzene, l-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl) cyclohexane, butylcyclohexane, decalin, tetralin, methyltetralin, butylbenzene, decahydro-2- methylnaphthalene, pentylcyclohexane, hexylcyclohexane, diethylcyclohexane, bicyclohexyl, biphenylmethane, l-methyl-2-cyclohexylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane,
benzylcyclohexane, methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,2-dicyclohexylethane, 1-phenyl-l- cyclohexylethane, l-phenyl-2-2cyclohexylethane, cyclohexylethylbenzene, dibenzyl, 4- methyldiphenylmethane, 3-methyldicyclohexylmethane, 1,3-dicyclohexylpropane, n- heptadecane, l,l'-(l,4-butanediyl)-cyclohexane, n-octadecane, 1,1-dicyclohexylpropane, and it contains less than 0.2 wt-% oxygen.
Figure 1 schematically illustrates an example of the above described process. The lignin oil starting material is fed into a desalting unit (1) which comprises a guard bed (Gl) including adsorbent, ion exchanger and/or absorbent material. The desalted oil is then fed into a reactor (2), shown here as a trickle bed reactor, which includes a packed bed comprising a first section (G2/i) comprised of guard material and/or inert material, and a second section (C) comprised catalyst material and optionally an upper portion of guard material (G2), and a third section (i) comprised of inert material. The reactor (2) comprises a pre-heated zone (5) and an isothermal zone (6). After reaction the resulting composition is cooled in a heat exchanger (7) and is the left to separate in a decanting unit (3), into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon phase (HC) and a water phase (W). The water separated in the decanting unit can be led back to the kraft mill. Gaseous products are led to a gas treater where H2S is removed, and H2 is then separated and recycled to the reactor, and the rest of the gases are retrieved as a gaseous hydrocarbon containing product. The liquid hydrocarbon phase (HC) is distilled (D) in a distillation unit (4) into three fractions where the first fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C (HC1), a second fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and (HC2), and a third fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C (HC3).
EXAMPLES Example 1
A hydrodesulfurization catalyst, NiMo on alumina, was loaded in both the pre-heated zone and the isothermal zone of the reactor. The inert filler below the catalyst was SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt-% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000015_0001
The process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
The pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2382 mbar.
The overall conversion was very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix of hydrocarbons (analyzed by off-line GC-MS) shown below.
Figure imgf000016_0001
GC-MS analysis indicate no oxygenates, not even for a derivatized sample. The water product also contain no oxygenates.
The sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 23 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C. A transparent and colorless hydrocarbon product was collected after 4 days at 330 °C whereas at lower temperatures a weak green coloring was observed.
The heat value of the hydrocarbon product was 43.8 MJ/kg.
The elemental analysis of the hydrocarbon product (ASTM D 5291 for carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and ASTM D 1552 for sulfur) show 88.1 wt-% carbon, 11.6 wt-% hydrogen, <0.1 wt- % nitrogen, <0.05 wt-% sulfur and 0.2 wt-% oxygen by difference.
Example 2
A hydrodesulfurization catalyst, CoMo on alumina, and a combined hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst, NiO on zeolite, were loaded in the reactor. The packing design was hydrodesulfurization catalyst on top of the hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst, at a volume ratio of 2:1 within the isothermal zone. The pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst alone. The inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm, the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm, and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000017_0001
The process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
The pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2384 mbar. The overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix of hydrocarbons (analyzed by off-line GC-MS) shown below.
Figure imgf000018_0001
The components shown in the GC-MS spectra above indicate that this combination of catalysts gives a less saturated mixture of components compared with Example 1. The CoMo catalyst gives some hydrodeoxygenation of the solvent benzyl alcohol to toluene whereas the NiMo catalyst in Example 1 provides more hydrogenation of toluene to
methylcyclohexane.
The sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 35 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C. A transparent and weakly colored hydrocarbon product was collected after 4 days at 330 °C whereas after 6.5 days at 310 °C the weak coloring swift from being green to orange like.
Example 3
A hydrodesulfurization catalyst, NiMo on alumina, and a combined hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst, NiO on zeolite, were loaded in the reactor. The packing design was a physical mixture of the hydrodesulfurization catalyst and the hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst at a volume ratio of 2:1 within the isothermal zone. The pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst alone. The inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000019_0001
The process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
The pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 974 mbar. A physical mix of catalysts gives the lowest pressure drop.
The overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C. The hydrocarbon product was shown to contain more components of lower boiling points without creating more CI and C2 in the gas phase. The sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 63 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C
A transparent and less weakly colored hydrocarbon product than Example 2 was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was slightly more progressed than Example 1.
The hydrocarbon product was grouped by GC-MS analysis into the following component classes where the area-% of the hydrocarbons can be estimated to be weight-%, not the oxygen or nitrogen components due to a different GC-MS response factor. Components Area-%
Aromates 48.58
Naphthenes 45.86
Paraffines 0.47
Olefines 0.96
Oxygen compounds 2.39
Nitrogen compounds 1.3
Rest 0.43
Example 4
A hydrodesulfurization catalyst, NiMo on alumina, and a physical mixture of the same hydrodesulfurization and a zeolite cracking catalyst, (a 1:2 volume ratio), were loaded in the reactor. The packing design was a NiMo on alumina catalyst on top of the physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and zeolite catalyst at a volume ratio of 1:1 within the isothermal zone. The pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst. The inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt-% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000020_0001
The process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging. The overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40- 60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix no different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C.
The pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 1354 mbar indicating a higher pressure drop for a stack of catalysts compared with physical mix in Example 3. The sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 23 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C.
A transparent and equally weakly colored hydrocarbon product as Example 3 was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was more progressed than Example 1 and 3. Example 5
A guard (alumina of high surface area and low NiMo content) and a hydrodesulfurization catalyst, NiMo on alumina, were loaded in the reactor. The packing design was a guard bed on top of the hydrodesulfurization catalyst at a volume ratio of 1:2 within the isothermal zone. The pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodesulfurization catalyst alone. The inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% crude bio-oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000021_0001
The process was operating continuously for 4 days without issues. After 4 days the temperature was decreased to 310 °C and then operated continuously for 2 days without issues. As a last step the temperature was decreased to 290 °C and at this temperature the rig plugged in a downstream section. Increasing the temperature again dissolves the plugging.
The pressure drop over the packed reactor after the trial was 2383 mbar. The overall conversion is very high at 310 and 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 40-60% of the hydrogen flow giving a product mix no different to example 1 at temperatures above 300 °C. The pressure drop was 2383 mbar indicating similar pressure drop as Example 1 and 2. The sulfur content in the hydrocarbon product was 89 ppm after 2 days of operation at 330 °C
A transparent and colorless hydrocarbon product was collected after 4 days at 330 °C and at lower temperatures the coloring effect was even less progressed than Example 1. Example 6
A hydrodeoxygenation catalyst, Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite, and a combined
hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst, NiO on zeolite, were loaded in the reactor. The packing design was a physical mixture of the hydrodeoxygenation catalyst and the hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst at a volume ratio of 2:1 within the isothermal zone. The pre-heated zone contained the same hydrodeoxygenation catalyst alone. The inert filler below the catalysts were SiC with a particle size of 125-160 μιη. The inner diameter of the reactor was 4.6 mm and the length of the pre-heated zone was 155.5 mm and the length of the isothermal zone was 200 mm and the length of the inert filling zone was 145 mm.
The lignin oil feedstock passing through the reactor was 20 wt% lignin oil in benzyl alcohol. The operating conditions were set to the following:
Figure imgf000022_0001
The process was operating continuously for 1 day- without issues.
The overall conversion is very high at 330 °C. The hydrogen consumption was 80 % of the hydrogen flow during the first day giving a hydrocarbon product mix similar to example 1. A transparent and colorless hydrocarbon product was collected after 1 day at 330 °C.

Claims

1. A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from a lignin oil, said lignin oil having an oxygen content of 10-30 wt-%, an average weight molecular weight of 500-800 g/mol with a polydispersity of 2, a heating value of 25-35 MJ/kg, a water content of 0-1.5 wt-%, a sodium content of 400-500 ppm, a potassium content of 50-100 ppm, a sulfur content of 1-2.5 wt-% and a total acid number of 110-125 mg KOH/g oil, wherein the process for producing the hydrocarbon product comprises the steps of treating the lignin oil in a rector in the presence of one or more of a hydrodesulfurization catalyst selected from NiMo on alumina or CoMo on alumina; or a hydrodesulfurization and cracking catalyst selected from NiMo on zeolite or CoMo on zeolite, or a hydrodeoxygenation and cracking catalyst selected from NiO on zeolite, zeolite alone or combinations thereof, or a hydrodeoxygenation catalyst selected from Ni/NiO, Cu/Cr, Pd/Cu, or Pt on a support material, such as chromite and/or alumina and/or zirconia and/or graphite and/or carbon and/or silica; or combinations thereof, and applying a H2 pressure of 30-160 bar, preferably 50-150 bar, a gas to oil ratio (GTO) of 200-2000 l/l (STP conditions), preferably 500-1500 l/l, at a temperature of 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and with a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) of 0.25-2 h 1 and preferably 0.5-1 h 1 followed by cooling the reaction product from the reactor to 20-30 °C, and separating the reaction product by phase separation, into a gaseous phase, a liquid hydrocarbon product phase, and a water phase, thereby obtaining the hydrocarbon product.
2. The process of claim 1, wherein the reactor is a reactor comprising a packed bed, which includes a first section of inert filling material and/or guard material and optionally a catalyst defined in claim 1, and a second section of the catalyst defined in claim 1 and optionally a guard material on top of the catalyst, and a third section of inert filling material and optionally a catalyst defined in claim 1, and wherein the lignin oil passes first the first section, then the second section, and then the third section.
3. The process of claim 2, wherein the reactor comprises a pre-heating zone and an isothermal zone, wherein the lignin oil temperature in the isothermal zone is the reaction temperature 290-400 °C, preferably 300-360 °C, and the lignin oil temperature in the pre-heating zone is 1-10 °C below the reaction temperature, and wherein the isothermal zone comprises the second section of the packed bed, and optionally a portion of the first section of the packed bed.
4. The process of claims 2 or 3, wherein the catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite.
5. The process of claim 4, wherein the volume ratio of NiMo on alumina and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1.
6. The process of claims 2 or 3, wherein the catalyst in the second section is a physical mixture of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite.
7. The process of claim 6, wherein the volume ratio of Ni/NiO on alumina/graphite and NiO on zeolite is 1-4:1, preferably 1.5-2.5:1, more preferably 2:1.
8. The process of any one of claims 1-7, wherein the resulting hydrocarbon product is separated into three fractions by means of distillation, wherein a first fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 35-180 °C,
a second fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point of 181-340 °C, and a third fraction comprises hydrocarbons having a boiling point above 340 °C.
9. The process of claim 8, wherein a fraction having a boiling point of 250-285 °C is separated from the hydrocarbon product, said fraction comprising dibenzyl, cyclohexylethylbenzene, 4-methyldiphenylmethane, benzylcyclohexane, dicyclohexylmethane and 1,2-dicyclohexylethane.
10. The process of any one of claims 1-9, wherein the gaseous phase separated in the phase separation is led through a gas treater, whereby H2S is removed, and H2 is then separated and recycled to the reactor, and the rest of the gases are retrieved as a gaseous hydrocarbon containing product.
11. The process of any one of claims 1-10, wherein the gaseous hydrocarbon containing product is led to a steam reformer producing H2and CO or C02, wherein H2 and CO are optionally led back to the process.
12. The process of any one of claims 1-11, wherein the lignin oil is desalted in a desalting unit prior to the reactor, said desalting unit comprising a bed of adsorbent, absorbent, or ion exchange material or combinations thereof.
13. The process of any one of claims 1-12, comprising addition of additional viscosity modifying, and/or lubricating and/or carbonium/arenium ion scavenging components to the lignin oil in an amount of 1-80 wt-%, preferably 10-20 wt% based on the weight of the lignin oil prior to the reactor and any desalting unit, said additional components being a combination of a solvent, preferably methanol, ethanol, toluene, o-, m-, p- xylene, p-cymene, anisole, diesel, gasoline, benzyl alcohol; or phenol, 2-naphthol, catechol, thymol, guaiacol, cresol; and/or mixtures thereof, and the hydrocarbon product obtained by the process.
14. The process of any one of claims 1-13, wherein the lignin oil fed into the process is lignin oil obtainable by a process in which a black liquor composition comprising kraft black liquor and having a hydroxide ion concentration of 1-40 g/l, based on the volume of black liquor, is reacted, preferably under a H2 or H2/CO syngas pressure of 5-150 bar, at 220-350 °C for 10-120 minutes in the absence of a solid catalyst; or at 180-240 °C for 10-120 minutes in the presence of a solid catalyst, thereby causing depolymerization of lignin in the black liquor; the reacted composition is cooled to a temperature below the boiling point of a solvent to be added subsequently, and is thereafter acidified until a pH of 4-5 is reached; and a solvent is added to the composition in order to extract oil from the composition, and the composition is separated by phase separation in a first separation step into an oil phase comprising solvent, oil, and organic acids; a first water phase comprising water, salts, and non-depolymerized lignin solids; and a second water phase comprising water and salts; the oil phase is filtered to remove any particles, and is then desalted in a water wash step by adding water and separating by phase separation into a second separation step into an oil phase comprising oil and solvent, and a water phase comprising salts; or by adding adsorbent and/or absorbent material or ion exchange material, or combinations thereof; and solvent comprised in the oil phase is evaporated, whereby the lignin oil is obtained.
15. A hydrocarbon product obtained by the process of claims 1-10, said product comprising
Cyclohexane
Methylcyclohexane
Toluene
Ethylcyclohexane
Ethylcyclopentane
Propylcyclohexane
Propylbenzene
l-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl) cyclohexane
Butylcyclohexane
Decalin
Tetralin
Methyltetralin
Butylbenzene
Decahydro-2-methylnaphthalene
Pentylcyclohexane
Hexylcyclohexane
Diethylcyclohexane
Bicyclohexyl
Biphenylmethane
l-Methyl-2-Cyclohexylcyclohexane
Dicyclohexylmethane
Benzylcyclohexane Methyldicyclohexylmethane
1.2- Dicyclohexylethane
1-Phenyl-l-cyclohexylethane
l-Phenyl-2-2cyclohexylethane
Cyclohexylethylbenzene
Dibenzyl
4-Methyldiphenylmethane
3-Methyldicyclohexylmethane
1.3- Dicyclohexylpropane
n-Heptadecane
l,l'-(l,4-butanediyl)-cyclohexane n-Octadecane
1,1-Dicyclohexylpropane and containing less than 0.2 wt-% oxygen.
PCT/SE2015/051164 2015-11-04 2015-11-04 A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil WO2017078582A1 (en)

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LTEP15907898.9T LT3371279T (en) 2015-11-04 2015-11-04 A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil
PL15907898T PL3371279T3 (en) 2015-11-04 2015-11-04 A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil
PT159078989T PT3371279T (en) 2015-11-04 2015-11-04 A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil
CA3004244A CA3004244C (en) 2015-11-04 2015-11-04 A process for producing a hydrocarbon product from lignin oil
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EP3693443A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-12 Sca Forest Products AB Process for the production of a hydrocarbon product
EP3693441A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-12 SCA Forest Products AB Process for the production of a bio-oil
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EP3932867A1 (en) 2020-06-29 2022-01-05 SCA Forest Products AB Production of lignin oil with an organic solvent
CN116273203A (en) * 2022-12-02 2023-06-23 宁夏大学 Method for preparing cyclohexane fuel by catalytic lignin pyrolysis oil hydrodeoxygenation through hollow NiCo/NC cage-shaped polyhedral catalyst
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WO2019038482A1 (en) * 2017-08-25 2019-02-28 Neste Oyj Heating oil
CN108043450A (en) * 2017-11-09 2018-05-18 沈阳航空航天大学 The preparation method and application of nickel, chromium Modified HZSM-5 Zeolite Catalyst
WO2020128161A1 (en) 2018-12-21 2020-06-25 Neste Oyj Selective hydroxyl group removal from alkylphenols
EP3693442A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-12 Sca Forest Products AB Process for the production of a bio-oil using a rosin-containing oil
EP3693443A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-12 Sca Forest Products AB Process for the production of a hydrocarbon product
EP3693441A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-12 SCA Forest Products AB Process for the production of a bio-oil
WO2020161320A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-13 Sca Forest Products Ab Process for the production of a hydrocarbon product
WO2020161323A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-13 Sca Forest Products Ab Process for the production of a bio-oil
WO2020161313A1 (en) 2019-02-08 2020-08-13 Sca Forest Products Ab Process for the production of a bio-oil using a rosin-containing oil
CN112892539A (en) * 2019-12-03 2021-06-04 中国科学院广州能源研究所 Method for coupling hydrogenolysis of lignin by heterogeneous catalyst and homogeneous catalyst
WO2021110933A1 (en) 2019-12-06 2021-06-10 Basf Se Method for preparation of lignin oligomers
EP3932929A1 (en) 2020-06-29 2022-01-05 Sca Forest Products AB Lignin oil from young plants
EP3932867A1 (en) 2020-06-29 2022-01-05 SCA Forest Products AB Production of lignin oil with an organic solvent
WO2022002775A1 (en) 2020-06-29 2022-01-06 Sca Forest Products Ab Production of lignin oil with an organic solvent
WO2022002774A1 (en) 2020-06-29 2022-01-06 Sca Forest Products Ab Lignin oil from young plants
CN111715275A (en) * 2020-07-27 2020-09-29 上海空间电源研究所 Pd/ZrO2Use of-HZSM-5 bifunctional catalyst
CN113277930A (en) * 2021-06-01 2021-08-20 中国科学技术大学 Method for preparing cresol by utilizing lignocellulose biomass
CN113277930B (en) * 2021-06-01 2023-08-29 中国科学技术大学 Method for preparing cresol by utilizing lignocellulose biomass
EP4261343A1 (en) 2022-04-13 2023-10-18 SCA Forest Products AB Conversion of biomass residues into bio-oil
WO2023198587A1 (en) 2022-04-13 2023-10-19 Sca Forest Products Ab Conversion of biomass residues into bio-oil
CN116273203A (en) * 2022-12-02 2023-06-23 宁夏大学 Method for preparing cyclohexane fuel by catalytic lignin pyrolysis oil hydrodeoxygenation through hollow NiCo/NC cage-shaped polyhedral catalyst

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